Authentic voices. Remarkable stories. AOL On Originals showcase the passions that make the world a more interesting place.

EMMY NOMINATED SERIES directed by and starring Steve Buscemi is back for a second season!!! Park Bench is a local's take on the special people, places, and spirit of New York City. Through unscripted moments with average New Yorkers and Steve's celeb friends, Buscemi takes viewers on a funny, first-hand journey/misadventure, told in his unique voice.

Journey to the Draft is an organic, unscripted, docu-series that follows three college football players, all with promising professional careers. These young men attend different schools across the country and play a variety of positions on the field, but at the end of the day they share one goal:to play in the NFL. The AOL docu-series follows players Leonard Williams, Kevin White and Marcus Peters.

Connected features the personal stories of six New Yorkers woven together into one of the most intimate series ever. This groundbreaking show changes the nature of storytelling by giving each character a camera to document their lives. The result is a unique format revealing as different as everyone appears to be, we are all universally Connected.

Wake up to your world in 2 minutes.

"Stricly Come Dancing presenter Tess Daly and The Saturdays' Rochelle Humes talk to mums about their experiences of being mum. Whether the daughter of a Rolling Stone, in one of the most famous girl bands the world has ever known, or a parent coping with disability as well as family life, each mother in Being Mum shows that the feelings, challenges and rewards of motherhood are universal no matter the surroundings you find yourself in."

Jews and Money. Asian Drivers. Polish IQ. CPT… that's racist! But where do these stereotypes come from? Comedian Mike Epps explores the backstories of this humor and how history and fact often distorts into a snide – but sometimes funny – shorthand.

"INSPIRED" features celebrities, visionaries and some of the biggest newsmakers of our generation, recounting the stories behind their biggest, life-changing moments of inspiration.

In a compelling series of verite encounters, Win Win provides unique access into the minds and lives of the world’s most-celebrated entrepreneurs and athletes.

Explore what it means to be human as we rush head first into the future through the eyes, creativity, and mind of Tiffany Shlain, acclaimed filmmaker and speaker, founder of The Webby Awards, mother, constant pusher of boundaries and one of Newsweek’s “women shaping the 21st Century.”

Nicole Richie brings her unfiltered sense of humor and unique perspective to life in a new series based on her irreverent twitter feed. The show follows the outspoken celebrity as she shares her perspective on style, parenting, relationships and her journey to adulthood.

Comedy is hard, but teaching comedy to children is hilariously difficult. Kevin Nealon is giving the challenge to some world-famous comedians. As these young minds meet with comedy’s best, get ready to learn some valuable comedy lessons, and to laugh!

James Franco loves movies. He loves watching them, acting in them, directing them, and even writing them. And now, he’s going to take some of his favorite movie scenes from the most famous films of all time, and re-imagine them in ways that only James can.

The story of punk rock singer Laura Jane Grace of Against Me! who came out as a woman in 2012, and other members of the trans community whose experiences are woefully underrepresented and misunderstood in the media.

Now the big question what's the difference between a film camera and a digital camera? Well, the prime differences in how the pictures formed. As we know when using film the light reflected from the subject through a lens strikes the film, which is a material tube with a chemical solution that reacts to light in reversed tones. This we know as the negative. The picture stored in the film canister to the roll is finished. Once the film is dropped off at the lab, the technician opens the canister in complete darkness and puts the film through a series of chemical processes that first bring up the negative image and then fix these images permanently.

The negatives are now put into an enlarger which projects the image onto a light sensitive piece of paper where the image is formed, which in turn again is chemically treated to preserve the image and now we have what is known as a photo. Now with digital photography the prime difference is that the process no longer uses chemicals but rather a series of tiny receptors behind the lens which convert the light reflected from the subject to electronic bits of information known as pixels which in turn are stored on what is known as a memory card. The information is then transferred into your computer and then created on a home printer or taken to your local camera store, supermarket or pharmacy where the photos are both printed and then stored on the disk which replaces the negatives.

This is a technological difference between film and digital cameras. Remember digital photography in one big respect is the same as film. We are looking at a subject through a view finder, through a lens using light to record that subject. But what makes digital photography so accessible to both the amateur and the professional is that the read out screen on even the most inexpensive cameras allows you to see right off whether or not the photo you just took is one you want to keep.

For whatever reason the image maybe blurry or you accidentally put your finger in front of the lens, you can now press the delete button and get rid of that wasted image. As a professional and guess this even happens to us, I’ve heard a nightmare stories of wrong exposures or cameras accidentally open and film fogged. In the past, as a professional one of my considerations when billing a client for a job was how great my film expense would be. I haven’t used film in two years and now I passed the savings onto my clients.

Now on purchasing digital camera you may want to start with an inexpensive point and shoot just in case photography is something in the end you like to leave to someone else. But consider this with digital photography, you never have to buy film and pay for processing again. Nor get stuck with images that are no use to you. In the given year there are birthdays, holidays, graduations and vacations. Consider that the few hundred dollars saved on film and processing might go to a better and more professional camera. Now you can really focus in on some great pictures.